Stay-at-Home Entrepreneur?
Tuesday June 30, 2009
Though the recession continues to plow onward, many entrepreneurial moms are getting a start on business ventures from the comfort—and flexibility—of their own homes.
Stay-at-home mom Julie Trade rakes in a six-figure salary while her two sons, ages 2 and 5, are asleep, CNNmoney.com reports. Trade works 40 hours a week, mostly between 4 a.m. and 8 a.m., plus evenings and weekends. During the day, however, she is a stay-at-home mom, much as she was before her husband was laid off in 2007. After a year of watching her husband struggle to find work, Trade, 40, struck out on her own out of a spare bedroom, intending to make a little extra cash with her marketing know-how. With clients like British Telecom and Argent Software, Trade estimates that she is now making twice what she made when she was working full-time before she became a mom.
While companies like the Atlanta-based Mom Corps are seeing a boom in the number of former stay-at-home moms seeking flexible options to return to work, others (like entrepreneurial effort-backer Tim Draper) say that recessions are the best times to start small businesses.
If your family’s finances need a little boost to make ends meet, or your ready to get back to (or redefine) your career without leaving home, becoming a work-at-home mom might be the right choice for you. About.com’s Guide for Work-At-Home Moms, Laureen Miles Brunelli, has a great list of possible careers for WAHMs to get your juices flowing.
Watch out for WAH scams and learn how to get started as a work-at-home mom.
Stay-at-home mom Julie Trade rakes in a six-figure salary while her two sons, ages 2 and 5, are asleep, CNNmoney.com reports. Trade works 40 hours a week, mostly between 4 a.m. and 8 a.m., plus evenings and weekends. During the day, however, she is a stay-at-home mom, much as she was before her husband was laid off in 2007. After a year of watching her husband struggle to find work, Trade, 40, struck out on her own out of a spare bedroom, intending to make a little extra cash with her marketing know-how. With clients like British Telecom and Argent Software, Trade estimates that she is now making twice what she made when she was working full-time before she became a mom.
While companies like the Atlanta-based Mom Corps are seeing a boom in the number of former stay-at-home moms seeking flexible options to return to work, others (like entrepreneurial effort-backer Tim Draper) say that recessions are the best times to start small businesses.
If your family’s finances need a little boost to make ends meet, or your ready to get back to (or redefine) your career without leaving home, becoming a work-at-home mom might be the right choice for you. About.com’s Guide for Work-At-Home Moms, Laureen Miles Brunelli, has a great list of possible careers for WAHMs to get your juices flowing.
Watch out for WAH scams and learn how to get started as a work-at-home mom.

Comments
The most important thing is to have access to good resources to learn from. Sure there are opportunities for huge profits but it takes hard work and focus.
I started my own home based business after I got laid off in December 08 and I tell you, it’s hard work. I’ve spent countless hours building, testing, breaking down, rebuilding, and testing some more. Finally the end result was Couponhubby.com